Just heard from Scott the owner/operator of the Starvation Ridge 24 Hr Race course, him and his wife are so cool and supportive. Here's the gist of it:
- Scott said: "Happy to see electrics coming out."
- Generators are allowed at night. The quieter the better.
- Mileage an be anywhere from 15 to 22. No longer than that. Key is how wet, more so than length.
- The Ridge has faster AND slower sections than Eddieville. Not as many jumps. Lots more chop at the Ridge.
This pretty much confirms what I was recalling about the race, but good to hear it straight from Scott. -Ed
Call me about riding the Ridge sometime. I could accomidate all your team members interested in the layout/running of the Ridge. We could go into the dark also if interested. The 24hr is 3 races in one.....start to dusk....dusk to dawn ( LIGHTS BABY ) .... and dawn to finish. In 16 years, we are 9 years dry to perfect.....7 years perfect to not so perfect!
If a group came down I would be happy to quafe a few adult beverages and lecture about the ins and outs of 24hr racing. After a riding show and tell.
One little kernel. 3 lightsources.......bike, batteries( or 2 separate batteries).... and a FLASHLIGHT!!! Seriously, I was doing final sweep at our 12hr race and ended up limping in with a AAA pocket penlight when my wiring failed to my HID. Mark at Task has some good lights at fair prices, I really like his helmet light, good spread with long battery life. Oh, the cold shortens battery life also...
Lighting is huge. Amount , focus, COLOR of the light, field of light. Pencil beams are useless, wide driving style lights are OK. If it is dry, the 6,000k LEDS make it hard to see detail in the light colored dust. If it is wet, the dark soil eats up every watt you can throw at it. I have fielded our club teams on modern as well as 80's Huskies. Batteries only ...work well as long as your lithium battery does not explode! ( Had that happen once).
my FAVORITE is a modified 8" HID with 50 watt ballast and 4200K color .
The 3 doorways through the farmhouse are 36", 34", and 32" wide. That last doorway really gets pounded!
Scott